Back to Basics for the Republican Party is a history of
the party with special emphasis on its origins and development through
the Reconstruction era. The book also tells the story of the
Democratic Party as well as of the Whig, Greenback, and other
parties. The narrative concludes during President Clinton's second
term.
Sample paragraphs: "The Republican Party is the Party of Lincoln."
Though Republican candidates may say this occasionally during campaign
season, we forget just as soon as they do. What does "Party of
Lincoln" actually mean? And more importantly, what should it mean,
for us Republicans and the country we love?
How many Americans know why the Republican Party began or what its
original purpose was? Not many! How many Americans know, for
example, that the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act
were reforms that the Republican Party struggled for in vain during
the Reconstruction era a hundred years earlier? Fewer still. The
13th amendment banning slavery, the 14th amendment extending the Bill
of Rights to the states, and the 15th amendment according voting
rights to blacks -- all three were enacted by the much-maligned
Radical Republicans in the face of fierce Democrat opposition. How
many Americans know that? Again, very few.
Now whose fault is it that so much past glory of the Republican
Party goes unnoticed today? Who should we blame? Ourselves, of
course. How can we hope to convince voters to place their confidence
in us when we lack confidence in our own heritage? And how can we
Republicans battle Democrats effectively on economic, foreign policy,
and other fronts when we act as if the world began the day we were
born?
To retake the ideological high ground and fight off the socialism
at the core of the Democratic Party we Republicans must embrace the
GOP's original reform agenda that is at once pro-free market and
pro-constitutional rights. The founders of our Party understood that
to win and to deserve to win, there should be no separating the two.
To understand this original vision of our Republican Party we look to
the site of the 2000 Republican National Convention. Philadelphia is
not only where the Constitution was written but where in 1856 the
first Republican National Convention met in order to save it, for
their generation unto ours.
Throughout Back to Basics for the Republican Party, we will
run through our fingers the links in the chain of events between then
and now. Placing events in context means reaching back to the
drafting of the Constitution to describe the point of view of patriots
in the 1850s who were alarmed that the slave system was extending
itself northward, threatening the free market system we still cherish
today.
Shocked by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, most northerners were outraged
at slavery, the South, and the Democratic Party. They realized that
soon territories as far north as Minnesota could enter the Union as
slave states, transforming the nation's dominant economic and social
system from free market to slavery. Amid the intense reaction,
so-called "anti-Nebraska" groups sprang up all across the North in
early 1854 to oppose the extension of slavery into the northern
territories. In hundreds of town meetings and demonstrations, Whigs,
Free Soil party members, and dissident Democrats united with a single
purpose: "Enough concessions to the Slavocrats! We draw the line
right here. NO SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES." Over the next few months
these groups would coalesce into our Republican Party.
The common perception that Democrats are somehow less respectful of
the Constitution, that they often revel in stretching and twisting it
to suit their purposes, is valid. The misty origins of the Democratic
Party lie, as we shall see, in the movement to oppose ratification of
the Constitution, while most people who advocated ratification formed
the Federalist Party, ancestor of our Republican Party. Democrats
spent decades before and after the Civil War yammering about states
rights, a doctrine they invented to preserve slavery, and used later
to defend racial discrimination. In contrast, the theme of the first
Republican administration was Lincoln's struggle to "preserve, protect,
and defend the Constitution of the United States".
Today's Republican Party places itself at an immense disadvantage.
Rather than express clearly what we should be for -- the free market
society we Republicans won the Civil War to preserve -- on too many
issues, too often our Party's policy is merely that we are against
whatever Democrats are for, or perhaps we want less of it than they
do. Our Party is an athlete who has lost his balance -- we are in
good shape, with plenty of drive, but until we regain our footing we
are going nowhere."
The author, a native and resident of Chicago, is a graduate of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service and the American Graduate School of International Management. Mr. Zak is also a former Foreign Service Officer. Before writing this book, he was a financial analyst for several institutions in Chicago and New York.